Legal Research AI

United States v. Roberts

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1997-07-23
Citations: 119 F.3d 1006
Copy Citations
37 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                          

No. 96-1933

                         UNITED STATES,

                            Appellee,

                               v.

                       DANIEL P. ROBERTS,

                     Defendant - Appellant.

                                          

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

             [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]

                                          

                             Before

                      Selya, Circuit Judge,

                   Cyr, Senior Circuit Judge,

                  and Keeton,  District Judge.

                                           

     William Maselli
                             , with whom 
                                         Law Offices of William Maselli
                                                                        was
on brief for appellant.
     F. Mark Terison, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
Jay 
              P. 
                 McCloskey, United States Attorney, and  Jonathan 
                                                                  A. 
                                                                      Toof,
Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.

                                          

                          July 23, 1997
                                          

 Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.


          KEETON, District 
                                     Judge. A jury convicted defendant-

appellant Daniel Roberts on charges of conspiracy to possess

anabolic steroids with intent to distribute, and possession of

anabolic steroids with intent to distribute, in violation of 21

U.S.C. SS 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(D), and 846. Defendant contends on

appeal that (1) four incidents of prosecutorial misconduct during

the closing and rebuttal arguments deprived him of a fair trial;

(2) the district judge's failure to instruct the jury on the

requested defense theory of possession constitutes reversible

error; and (3) the district judge's instructions and re-

instructions on permissible inferences from possession in quantity

were unfairly prejudicial. Concluding that the egregiousness of

the prosecutorial misconduct alone deprived Roberts of a fair

trial, we vacate the convictions and remand for a new trial.

                         I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

          Since we are concerned with the claim of prosecutorial

misconduct and not with a claim of insufficient evidence, our

description of the facts is not limited to evidence and inferences

most generous to the government. Rather, we state a balanced

description of the evidence in the record before us, to aid in

focusing on whether the impermissible comments of the prosecutor

tainted the proceedings materially. 
                                             See 
                                                 Arrieta-Agressot v. 
                                                                     United

States, 3 F.3d 525, 528 (1st Cir. 1993) (court does not "take the

evidence in the light most favorable to the government" because the

                               -2-


jury decision for conviction "may itself be tainted by the improper

remarks").

          An investigation that led to this prosecution commenced

when a young boy's mother told local police that Robert Tibbetts

had sold steroids to her teenage son. The ensuing investigation

and eventual detention of Tibbetts led, in turn, to defendant

Roberts, as explained more fully below.

          At trial Robert Tibbetts, appearing as a witness called

by the government, pursuant to a cooperation agreement, testified

to the events summarized here.

          Tibbetts purchased anabolic steroids from Dr. Patterson,

a veterinary doctor in Maine, representing their intended use to be

for draft horses. After Tibbetts had purchased steroids two or

three times each week during 1995, Dr. Patterson cut off Tibbetts'

supply because he was concerned about potentially illicit use.

Tibbetts then began obtaining steroids from a different source --

a Dr. Hussey of North Conway, New Hampshire -- from whom he also

purchased oil-based testosterone every week.

          During this time, Daniel Roberts began buying steroids

from Tibbetts. Roberts worked as a personal trainer at different

gyms in the Lewiston-Auburn area. He was certified to advise

clients about nutrition and fitness and was himself a member of a

team of weightlifters. Those of Roberts' clients who testified

said they had no knowledge of Roberts' selling steroids, nor did

they have knowledge of his encouraging the use of steroids. Both

Roberts' girlfriend, Michelle Saba, and Tibbetts testified that

                               -3-


Roberts owned no large animals to whom the steroids could have been

administered legally.

          When Roberts became concerned because a large part of an

order was missing from a North Conway shipment, Roberts and

Tibbetts met to discuss the possibility that Roberts would make the

necessary trips to New Hampshire instead of Tibbetts. Up until

this point, Roberts had been providing between $1000 and $1500 in

cash for the drugs for each trip Tibbetts made. In addition, Dr.

Hussey had begun to express his concern over the quantity of

steroids Tibbetts purchased on such a regular basis. Tibbetts then

told Roberts he would not make any more trips to North Conway.

Instead, Tibbetts suggested that Roberts make the trips and use

Tibbetts' name. Both Dr. Hussey and his secretary confirmed that

someone other than Tibbetts began picking up and paying for the

steroids during the fall of 1995.

          Tibbetts having been turned in by a concerned mother, as

stated above, because he allegedly sold steroids to her teenage

son, the investigation of Tibbetts led to the delivery and sale of

steroids from Dr. Hussey's office. Agent Bals of the United States

Drug Enforcement Administration arranged to monitor a transaction

and to detain a person involved, who turned out to be Roberts on

his way home from Dr. Hussey's office in New Hampshire. Roberts'

car was stopped in Maine by Maine law enforcement authorities.

Roberts handed over a large box of steroids, telling the Maine law

enforcement officers that the steroids were for Roberts' own

personal use.

                               -4-


          At trial, Michelle Saba, Roberts' girlfriend and a

reluctant witness, indicated that the defendant was obsessed with

weight lifting and with increasing his weight. He had grown from

130 pounds, when she met him several years ago, to well over 200

pounds. Saba further testified that Roberts used steroids daily,

sometimes twice a day, and that their desperate financial situation

was due to his addiction.

          Russell Barlow, a high school teacher and friend of

Roberts, testified that becoming larger and stronger was an

obsession for Roberts and that Roberts took steroids for that

reason. Barlow further testified that he (Barlow) operated a

personal training business, and it was his experience that abusers

of steroids would often hoard the drug in anticipation of a time

when it would be unavailable. Apparently, weight lifters were able

to procure steroids from the black market and from veterinarians,

but since black market steroids were frequently impure, weight

lifters preferred drugs provided by a veterinarian.

          Agent Bals testified that a lively market for steroids

existed in the gyms and among participants in various sports.

Barlow stated that selling steroids could be very profitable,

especially since the shelf life of many steroids was as long as

five years.

          The only evidence linking Roberts to the sale of

steroids, however, other than his being in possession of large

quantities, was the testimony at trial of Tibbetts, who said that

Roberts had once stated that he had lost money selling steroids in

                               -5-


Massachusetts. Telephone records in evidence show that Roberts

made frequent calls to telephones located in Massachusetts.

B. Indictment, Conviction, and Sentence

          In a two-count indictment returned on February 15, 1996,

Roberts was charged with (1) conspiracy to possess with intent to

distribute anabolic steroids and (2) possession with intent to

distribute anabolic steroids in violation of 21 U.S.C. SS 841(a)

(1), 841(b)(1)(D) and 846.

          On April 25, 1996, the jury trial began in the United

States District Court for the District of Maine. On April 26,

1996, the jury returned verdicts of guilty on both counts.

          The district judge sentenced Roberts to concurrent

sentences of sixteen months in prison for each of the two counts,

to be followed by two concurrent three-year terms of supervised

release. Following imposition of sentence, Roberts filed this

timely appeal.

                  II. PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT

A. Trial Transcript

          We recite verbatim substantial parts of the 22-minute

summation and 10-minute rebuttal of the prosecutor.

               MR. TOOF: (10:18 AM) Ladies and
            gentlemen of the jury, after I get done
            arguing, Mr. Maselli will have an
            opportunity to address you and I will then
            have a brief opportunity, when he is done,
            for rebuttal.

                              . . .

                               -6-


               As I go through my review of the
            evidence I will point out several areas in
            which you could be misled from your oath
            and obligation as jurors in this case. I
            want to remind you, and I remind you again
            and again and again that this is not a
            popularity contest, this is not [a] what
            should be done contest,  this 
                                                    is 
                                                       a 
                                                          trial
            that  
                            defines  
                                     justice  
                                               based  
                                                      on  
                                                           your
            objective evaluation of the facts in this
            case.  
                            In other words, what has been shown
            to you, what has not been shown to you and
            what  
                            you  
                                 reasonably  
                                              infer  
                                                     from  
                                                            the
            evidence that has been brought before you.

                             . . . 

               The defense counsel spent a great deal
            of time attempting to show you that Mr.
            Tibbetts is not the kind of man the
            federal government wants you to believe.

               [A q]uestion was asked relative to his
            suggest[ed] sexual inclinations, that he
            used young boys not only for business
            purposes but to assist him in the
            distribution of anabolic steroids and what
            have you.

               There is not a fact, there is not one
            fact that has been established in this
            case that Mr. Tibbetts did any of these
            things.

               However, if you accept the questions as
            facts you could conclude what is the
            government doing dealing with him, a guy
            like this.   Let 
                                       me 
                                          tell 
                                                you 
                                                    that 
                                                          every
            day, 
                           every 
                                 courtroom 
                                           in 
                                              this 
                                                   country 
                                                            the
            federal government, the state government,
            uses 
                           people 
                                  like 
                                       Robert 
                                              Tibbetts 
                                                       and 
                                                            the
            reason for it is because Tibbetts elected
            to  
                          plead  
                                 guilty,  
                                          and  
                                               was  
                                                     testifying
            yesterday to save his hide.

               As Mr. Maselli suggests,        either
            Tibbetts  
                                was  
                                     a  
                                        trained  
                                                 monkey  
                                                          doing
            whatever  he  could  do  to  satisfy  the
            government 
                                 masters 
                                         or 
                                            he 
                                               was 
                                                   telling 
                                                            the
            truth.

               Do 
                            you 
                                think 
                                       this 
                                            is  
                                                the 
                                                    first 
                                                           time

                               -7-


            anything 
                               like 
                                    this 
                                          happened?   
                                                     Of 
                                                         course
            not, that is why we have things like plea
            agreements. If you want to go home
            tonight in time to watch the early news,
            in time for dinner, you can decide this
            case very quickly but if you do you will
            not have considered all of the evidence.
            I 
                        ask 
                            you 
                                that 
                                     you 
                                         consider 
                                                  the 
                                                       Tibbetts
            testimony in view of the agreement. These
            are the terms and conditions which control
            the government's entire relationship with
            this 
                           man, 
                                nothing 
                                        more, 
                                              nothing 
                                                      less. I
            ask you to read paragraphs 5, 4, 5 and 10.

               All right. Once you conclude that, I
            believe you will believe his testimony was
            controlled by this evidence, nothing more
            and nothing less. You should weigh his
            credibility in view of this agreement.
            This 
                           is 
                              all 
                                  we 
                                     have 
                                          to 
                                             gain, 
                                                   and 
                                                       this 
                                                             is
            all 
                          we 
                             have 
                                   to 
                                      lose 
                                            from 
                                                 his  
                                                      testimony
            before you.

                              . . .

               Tibbetts told you that Drown provided
            the money, Tibbetts made the order,
            Tibbetts went to the doctor' office in
            North Conway and obtained the steroids[,]
            provided them to Drown so that he could do
            with them whatever he wanted.

               This relationship went on for two or
            three orders from Dr. Hussey until only
            half an order came [back to Drown]. Drown
            came over to Tibbetts' house and wanted to
            know where the rest of the order was.
            During the conversation the defendant,
            Danny Roberts, said something like, "I'll
            break your bones, those are my steroids."
            It 
                         was 
                             brought 
                                     out 
                                         throughout 
                                                    the 
                                                         course
            of trial that the reason that Tibbetts was
            afraid 
                             of 
                                the 
                                    problems, 
                                              is 
                                                 that 
                                                       Tibbetts
            was aware that Roberts was the treasurer,
            I  
                        believe,  
                                  of  
                                     the  
                                          Sarasins  
                                                    Motorcycle.
            That 
                           fact 
                                should 
                                       not 
                                            qualify 
                                                    you 
                                                        in 
                                                            any
            way 
                          in 
                             reaching 
                                       your 
                                            verdict 
                                                    because 
                                                             if
            you do, you will have decided the case for
            the wrong reasons, whether he is a member
            of  
                         a  
                            motorcycle  
                                        gang  
                                             or  
                                                 whatever,  
                                                            has
            nothing to do with the facts of this case.
            All right?

                               -8-


               This is not a personality contest.

                              . . .

               Agent Bals [...] and the local police
            department got involved in the case on or
            about January 28th or 29th they went to
            Dr. Hussey's office, and they went there
            because back on the 23rd, Dr. Hussey
            received a Federal Express package
            addressed to him from the defendant.
            Inside was a check for almost $10,000 from
            Robert Tibbetts to Dr. Hussey and a note
            asking for some thousand dollars worth of
            steroids. Okay?

               He  
                            did  
                                 a  
                                    controlled  
                                               dilute,  
                                                        if  
                                                            you
            will,  where  Roberts  came  to  pick  up
            steroids, 
                                and 
                                    the 
                                         agents 
                                                waited 
                                                       to 
                                                           take
            possession,  
                                  they  
                                        followed  
                                                 him  
                                                      down  
                                                            the
            road back to Maine and then arrested him.
            All right.

               That 
                              is 
                                 essentially 
                                              what 
                                                   the 
                                                       case 
                                                             is
            all about.
                              . . .

               How many years' supply did these two
            guys obtain in 3 1/2 months? I suggest to
            you that even under a conservative
            estimate, even if Ms. Saba hedged a
            little bit and in fact the defendant was
            not using two bottles, he was using four
            bottles, he bought enough steroids to last
            him until the year 2000.      Ladies  
                                                            and
            gentlemen, 
                                 that 
                                      fact, 
                                            not 
                                                that 
                                                      inference
            but 
                          that 
                               fact, 
                                     that 
                                          fact 
                                               should 
                                                      lead 
                                                            you
            to 
                         a 
                           conclusion, 
                                       that 
                                            conclusion 
                                                       is 
                                                           that
            Roberts  did  not  use  all  this  supply
            himself. I'm not beginning to contest the
            possibility that he didn't use some of it
            because he did. He is an anabolic junkie.
            But he also dealt some too. He didn't
            deal it to Hebert and Tehan, to Sandra
            Roy, the lady that gave him a ride to
            North Conway, not knowing where she was
            going, and certainly not to Michelle Saba.
            He dealt it to those people obsessed with
            anabolic steroids and who are looking for
            a good source of supply.

               You 
                             know, 
                                   the 
                                        thing 
                                              in  
                                                  this 
                                                       case 
                                                             is

                               -9-


            that 
                           the 
                               defendant 
                                          has 
                                              no 
                                                 obligation 
                                                             to
            testify and you should take that fact into
            consideration 
                                    in 
                                       no 
                                          way 
                                              whatsoever.  
                                                            But
            with 
                           respect 
                                   to 
                                      the 
                                          rest 
                                               of 
                                                  the 
                                                      case 
                                                            the
            defendant has the same responsibility and
            that 
                           is 
                              to 
                                 present 
                                         a 
                                           compelling 
                                                      case, 
                                                             if
            they  
                           are  
                                to  
                                   go  
                                       forward.   
                                                  We  
                                                      know the
            defendant deals with a large number of
            people, according to Mr. Barlow, thousands
            of people involved with weight lifting and
            anabolic steroids.  Who did you see, 2 of
            50 
                         people 
                                that 
                                     he 
                                         trains.   
                                                  Where 
                                                        is 
                                                            the
            team?  
                            Russell Barlow?
                                             
                                             Is that it?
                                                          
                                                          Where
            did the steroids go?  You know where they
            went to.  Thank you. (10:40 AM).

(Excerpts from Transcript of Jury Trial, April 25-26, 1996, at 228-

38 (emphasis added)).

          We quote a part of the defense summation, for context.

               MR. MASELLI: Thank you, your Honor.
            May it please the Court. Ladies and
            gentlemen of the jury, Mr. Toof sat down
            rather quickly and I guess this case is to
            be based on conjecture, guessing as to
            what the evidence is and what happened. 
            Then I guess it should take 5 or 10
            minutes and you can get home, not just for
            dinner but you can get home for lunch as
            well. If you want to base this case on
            guessing as to what the evidence is, it is
            going to be very easy.

                              . . .

               You know, Mr. Toof tells you about
            Tibbetts, and I will talk about Tibbetts
            as we go along here, about Tibbetts, he
            signed an agreement to tell the truth with
            the government, and so he wants you to
            believe that he is coming here to tell the
            truth. He never tells the truth to
            anybody else, and he sees people left and
            right but he is telling the truth now.
                              . . .

               Mr.   
                              Toof's   
                                       comments   
                                                 about   
                                                         Daniel
            Roberts' association is like Shakespeare's
            Mark Anthony, talking about how Brutus is
            an honorable man.
                                        
                                        He wants you to draw an

                              -10-


            honest 
                             conclusion 
                                        when 
                                             he 
                                                is 
                                                   telling 
                                                            you
            that Mr. Roberts is in a gang, and not to
            think 
                            about 
                                  it. If he is not in a gang,
            he belongs to a club.

               Second of all, you don't need to guess
            or speculate whether or not Danny Roberts
            is an honorable man, you've heard plenty
            of evidence and you know that he is.

                             . . . 

               So 
                            in 
                               closing 
                                        we 
                                           ask 
                                               you 
                                                    to 
                                                       keep 
                                                             in
            mind that it is not Daniel Roberts' burden
            or  
                          obligation  
                                      to  
                                           prove  
                                                  that  
                                                        he  
                                                             is
            innocent.

               How do you prove that you are innocent
            other than pleading not guilty? Getting
            up and saying, "I didn't do it." It is not
            his burden to convince you of his
            innocence.   It  
                                       is  
                                           the  
                                                burden  
                                                        on  
                                                            the
            government  
                                 to  
                                     establish  
                                               guilt  
                                                      beyond  
                                                              a
            reasonable doubt and the specific charges
            that 
                           they 
                                brought 
                                        against 
                                                 him 
                                                     and 
                                                         it 
                                                             is
            only 
                           by 
                              holding 
                                       the 
                                           prosecution 
                                                       to 
                                                           that
            burden of proof that justice is done.

                              . . .

               Justice is holding the government to
            the burden of proof that the law places
            upon them to protect every single one of
            us.

                              . . .

               You 
                             know 
                                  why 
                                       Dan 
                                           Roberts 
                                                   was 
                                                        getting
            the 
                          steroids.  
                                     The 
                                         prosecution 
                                                     is 
                                                         asking
            you 
                          to 
                             come 
                                   to 
                                      another 
                                              conclusion 
                                                          based
            upon guess work.
                              . . .

               Daniel Roberts is not guilty of these
            offenses. We ask you to return the
            verdict of not guilty on both.

               Thank you very much. (11:10 AM).

(Id. at 238-41, 253-55 (emphasis added)).

          Following are excerpts from the 10-minute rebuttal of the

                              -11-


prosecutor.

               MR. TOOF: Thank you, your Honor.
            Ladies and gentlemen, a 
                                              strange 
                                                      twist 
                                                             in
            defense counsel's argument. He closed out
            by arguing lack of evidence when he spent
            the 
                          lion's 
                                 share 
                                       in 
                                          telling 
                                                  you 
                                                      that 
                                                            you
            can't believe a guy like Robert Tibbetts.

                             . . . 

               This is not Tibbetts' trial. His day
            in court may or may not come because of
            other cases he has. I ask again that you
            review his testimony in conjunction and
            ask yourself this question:    Would  
                                                            you
            believe 
                              what 
                                   he 
                                       had 
                                           to 
                                              tell 
                                                    you 
                                                        if 
                                                            you
            knew that he didn't tell you the truth and
            faces 
                            the 
                                consequences 
                                             set 
                                                 forth 
                                                       in 
                                                           that
            plea agreement?

               That is the issue.

                             . . . 

               Now, if you're going to lie, if you're
            going to pin Dan Roberts with something,
            the clear inference is, from defense
            counsel, this is just that Tibbetts was
            going to come in here without assistance
            and our sanction and purge [sic] himself.
            If you're going to do that, you do a much
            better job.... If we are going to prepare
            our 
                          witnesses 
                                    to 
                                       lie, 
                                            we 
                                               would 
                                                     do 
                                                        a 
                                                           much
            better 
                             job 
                                 than 
                                      that. Enough said about
            Tibbetts.

                              . . .

               Now, the essence of the defendant's
            closing was that you should acquit because
            of insufficient evidence.

               The essence of the defendant's argument
            was that you can't allow the government to
            use this kind of witness to prove this
            kind of case.

               All 
                             I 
                               can 
                                   tell 
                                        you, and repeat to you
            again, that is not the basis upon which
            you can decide issues in this case,   you
            have  
                            to  
                                look  
                                      dispassionately  
                                                       at  
                                                            the

                              -12-


            evidence  
                               and  
                                    draw  
                                         reasonable  
                                                     inferences
            that should be drawn from that evidence.

                              . . .

               Mr. Maselli says, you know, the
            government with all its power, resources
            and all of its whatever, there is no
            evidence of one sale. And you are right,
            there is no evidence of a search of
            defendant's house; and you are right, that
            argument is one, an invitation for a cop
            out. You go back to the jury room and
            say, they could have given us more. But
            you have to consider all of the evidence,
            and if I'm wrong Mr. Maselli will probably
            stand up and let us know.    He 
                                                      knows 
                                                             as
            well 
                           as  
                              I 
                                 do 
                                    there 
                                           are 
                                               extremely 
                                                          sound
            reasons why the government cannot bring in
            people  
                             to  
                                 take  
                                      the  
                                           stand  
                                                 and  
                                                      say  
                                                           they
            bought anabolic steroids from Tibbetts or
            Roberts,  that  I  was  involved  in  the
            conspiracy equally as the defendant.
                                                           
                                                           That
            is  
                         a  
                            fact,  
                                  and  
                                       that  
                                            is  
                                                the  
                                                    law.   
                                                            Why
            didn't  
                             we  
                                 search  
                                         the  
                                              house  
                                                     in  
                                                         Poland
            Springs?   
                                Because 
                                        that 
                                              is 
                                                 an 
                                                    [abuse 
                                                            of]
            power  
                            of  
                                the  
                                    government.   
                                                  There  
                                                         is  
                                                             no
            evidence   
                                of   
                                     the   
                                           seizure   
                                                     of   
                                                          those
            anabolics.

               MR. MASELLI: I object, he is speaking
            of facts outside of the evidence.

               THE COURT: Overruled, he may continue.

               MR. TOOF:  There 
                                          is 
                                             no 
                                                evidence 
                                                          based
            upon what you heard during this trial that
            the government had sufficient cause to go
            in Michelle Saba and Dan Roberts' house to
            go in and search for steroids.

                              . . .

               Now, there are too many steroids here
            for personal use and the law tells you
            there is a reasonable inference, that you
            can reasonably conclude that the steroids
            were being distributed.

                              . . .

               THE COURT: Mr. Toof, you have only 10

                              -13-


            minutes in rebuttal.

               MR. TOOF: Thank you. Sandra Roy
            didn't know they were going to North
            Conway. Didn't know. The evidence is
            sufficient for you to return a verdict of
            guilty. Thank you very much. (11:18 AM).

(Id. at 255-260 (emphasis added)).

B. The Standard for Determining Prosecutorial Misconduct 
    Applicable to This Case

          On appeal, Roberts raises several issues of prosecutorial

misconduct as to which his counsel did not make timely objections

during the proceedings below. We first consider whether he has

waived or otherwise lost his right of appeal with regard to those

claims of error. See, 
                                e.g., 
                                      United States
                                                    v. 
                                                       Taylor, 54 F.3d 967,

972 (1st Cir. 1995); United 
                                      States v.  Griffin, 818 F.2d 97, 100

(1st Cir.), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 844 (1987).

          Rights to have a claim of error heard on the merits are

sometimes lost by failure to object in the trial court. 
                                                                 See 
                                                                     United

States v. 
                   Olano, 507 U.S. 725, 732-34 (1993). "In general, the law

ministers to the vigilant, not to those who sleep upon perceptible

rights." Taylor, 54 F.3d at 972.

          Requiring parties to raise contemporaneous objections

serves several important functions. It gives the trial court the

first opportunity to correct potential injustice by invoking an

immediate cure and forestalling future harm. 
                                                      See 
                                                          Griffin, 818 F.2d

at 100 (finding that contemporaneous objections give "both the

court and the party's opponent fair warning and a timely

opportunity to acknowledge bevues and correct them so that cases

                              -14-


can be decided squarely on merit"). Ordinarily, the trial judge is

in the best position to assess the damage at the time done.   Id.

Also, the raise-or-lose rule "prevents sandbagging" and inhibits

strategic or tactical silences that quietly nurture the seed of

trial error for assertion on appeal, should all else fail. 
                                                                    Taylor,

54 F.3d at 972. In short, adhering to the raise-or-lose rule makes

a positive contribution to "the balanced and orderly functioning of

our adversarial system of justice."  Griffin, 818 F.2d at 99-100.

          Invariable application of the raise-or-lose rule,

however, would be "out of harmony with ... the rules of fundamental

justice."   Olano, 507 U.S. at 732 (1993) (quoting     Hormel v.

Helvering, 312 U.S. 552, 557 (1941)) (internal quotation marks

omitted). Provisions of a Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure are

on point:

               (a) Harmless Error. Any error, defect,
            irregularity or variance which does not
            affect substantial rights shall be
            disregarded.
               (b) Plain Error. Plain error or defects
            affecting substantial rights may be
            noticed although they were not brought to
            the attention of the court.

Fed. R. Crim. P. 52.

          This Circuit has consistently held, in applying the law

of preclusion as laid down in 
                                       Olano, 507 U.S. at 733-34, and 
                                                                     United

States v. 
                   Young, 470 U.S. 1, 15 (1985) (plain-error exception is to

be used sparingly, solely to avoid miscarriage of justice), that

errors not objected to at trial will be reviewed by the appellate

court only when they are "plain" and undermine the fundamental

fairness of the trial.  See, e.g., United 
                                                    States v. Sullivan, 85

                              -15-


F.3d 743, 748 (1st Cir. 1996); United States
                                                       v. 
                                                          Luciano-Mosquera,

63 F.3d 1142, 1156 (1st Cir. 1995), 
                                            cert. denied
                                                        , --- U.S. ---, 116

S. Ct. 1879 (1996);  Taylor, 54 F.3d at 972;    United  
                                                                 States v.

Romero, 32 F.3d 641, 651 (1st Cir. 1994);      United  
                                                                 States v.

Hunnewell, 891 F.2d 955, 956 (1st Cir. 1989);   United 
                                                                 States v.

Mejia-Lozano, 829 F.2d 268, 272-73 (1st Cir. 1987).

          Plain error review is ordinarily limited to

"blockbusters" and does not "consider the ordinary backfires --

whether or not harmful to a litigant's cause -- which may mar a

trial record."  Griffin, 818 F.2d at 100. The plain error hurdle

is high. See 
                       Hunnewell, 891 F.2d at 956. Exceptions to the raise-

or-lose rule are reserved for the redress of those errors that

"seriously affect the fairness, integrity or public reputation of

the judicial proceedings."  Young, 470 U.S. at 14 (quoting United

States v. Atkinson, 297 U.S. 157, 160 (1936) (internal quotation

marks omitted)).

          Among the strictures that channel appellate discretion in

plain error review are three of commonly recognized significance:

the appellant must show (1) the occurrence of an error; (2) that

the error is obvious or clear under current law; and (3) that the

error substantially and adversely affects the rights of the

appellant. See Olano, 507 U.S. at 732-34; United States v. Laboy-

Delgado, 84 F.3d 22, 31 (1st Cir. 1996); Romero, 32 F.3d at 651.

In order to discern the severity of the error and its weight in

plain-error analysis, a court must evaluate the error against the

entire record.  See Griffin, 818 F.2d at 100. See also Young, 470

                              -16-


U.S. at 11-12;  Laboy-Delgado, 84 F.3d at 29;   United 
                                                                 States v.

McMahon, 938 F.2d 1501, 1505 (1st Cir. 1991).

C. Application of the Standard

          It is axiomatic that the defendant's right against self-

incrimination, as protected by the Fifth Amendment, forbids the

prosecution from commenting on an accused's failure to take the

stand and testify on his own behalf.  See Griffin v.  California,

380 U.S. 609, 613 (1965).

          In the present case, in fairness to the prosecution, we

must take account of the use by defense counsel of a permissible

defense strategy with respect to a "theory of the case." A

defendant is guaranteed an opportunity to advance a "theory of the

case" from the defense perspective.  See United States v. Rivera-

Santiago, 107 F.3d 960, 967 (1st Cir. 1997) ("The defendants were

entitled to have their theory of the case, as developed through

their evidence, presented to the jury on an equal footing with the

government's theory of the case."). When a defendant advances a

"theory of the case," however, this opens the door to an

appropriate response by the prosecution, commenting on the "quality

of his ... witnesses or ... attacking the weak evidentiary

foundation on which the defendant's theory of the case rested."

United 
                 States v. Savarese, 649 F.2d 83, 87 (1st Cir. 1981). In

Savarese, this Circuit recognized that the government, in its

response, has some leeway to comment on the defendant's failure to

produce evidence supporting the defendant's stated theory.    Id.

                              -17-


The door, however, is not open to the prosecutor's using such an

occasion to comment, even indirectly, on a defendant's failure to

testify.  E.g., United 
                                 States v.  Glantz, 810 F.2d 316, 322 (1st

Cir. 1987). The applicable standard is

            whether, in the circumstances of the
            particular case, the language used was
            manifestly intended or was of such
            character that the jury would naturally
            and necessarily take it to be a comment on
            the failure of the accused to testify.

Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Applying this standard, we

conclude that the prosecutor in this case impermissibly entered

upon forbidden terrain.  See also United States v. Hardy, 37 F.3d

753, 757 (1st Cir. 1994) (prosecutorial argument that defendants

were "still running and hiding"); United 
                                                   States v. Skandier, 758

F.2d 43, 45 (1st Cir. 1985) (finding prosecutor's question during

closing as to how defense counsel would explain identified events

that occurred, in a case where the defendant did not take the

stand, violative of the Griffin rule).

          In the present case, the prosecutor violated both the

rule against commenting on the defendant's failure to testify and

the rule against telling the jury that the defendant has a burden

of proving his innocence. The prosecutor at intervals throughout

his original summation and his rebuttal made comments that

supported a theme, explicitly stated at one point in the remark

that, when a defendant does "go forward" to offer evidence, "the

defendant has the same responsibility [as the government] and that

is to present a compelling case." (Tr. at 237.)          See the

emphasized passages in quotations from the record, in Part II.A,

                              -18-


above.

          In some circumstances, contemporaneous curative

instructions have been determined to be sufficient to correct an

obscure reference to one or the other of these two basic rules that

the prosecutor violated in this case. The offending remarks in this

case, however, were not obscure, and curative instructions were

neither requested nor given.

          Given the particular facts of this case, the

prosecutorial excesses identified above were alone too egregious

for this conviction to stand. But there is more. The prosecutor

alluded in his closing argument to evidence not in the record. He

told the jury:

            It was brought out throughout the course
            of the trial that the reason that Tibbetts
            was afraid of the problems, is that
            Tibbetts was aware that Roberts was the
            treasurer, I believe, of the Sarasins
            Motorcycle. That fact should not qualify
            you in any way in reaching your verdict
            because if you do, you will have decided
            the case for the wrong reasons, whether he
            is a member of a motorcycle gang or
            whatever, has nothing to do with the facts
            of this case. 

(Tr. at 233.) The rhetorical style of this comment is like that of

the prosecutor's saying to the jury, "the defendant has no

obligation to testify and you should take that fact into

consideration in no way whatsoever" (Tr. at 239), following

immediately with an assertion that is at least seriously misleading

if not worse: "But with respect to the rest of the case the

defendant has the same responsibility and that is to present a

                              -19-


compelling case, if they are to go forward." (   Id.) In all of

these instances, neither the prosecutor's assertion of belief that

the proposition was legally valid nor the context of its use by the

prosecutor insulate it from judicial scrutiny.  See United States

v. Manning, 23 F.3d 570, 574 (1st Cir. 1994); Arrieta-Agressot, 3

F.3d at 529 (finding that inflammatory arguments "excite the jury,

invite a partisan response, and distract its attention from the

only issue properly presented in the case" (emphasis in original)).

In context, the jury, quite reasonably, could have interpreted the

prosecutor's comments in this case as rhetorical flourishes meant

to invite them to do just what the introductory comments literally

said they should not do. Why else would the prosecutor be saying

anything at all about a forbidden subject matter?

          The record before this court on appeal contains no

evidence of Roberts' involvement in any gang. Protestations before

this Court that the prosecutor was merely taking care to

demonstrate an intention to be fair ring hollow. Being fair in

fact is commendable. But parading an appearance of fairness by

calling attention to things not to be considered by the jury is a

dubious tactic in any setting. It is certainly not permissible

when the way it is carried through -- by pointing out the

prohibited comments in order to warn the jury of their forbidden

nature -- tends to implant in the minds of jurors the very things

forbidden, by saying they are things the jury must think about in

order to remember not to think about them.

          We do not lightly excuse the lack of contemporaneous

                              -20-


objections. But, at times, the judge must intervene. In our

judgment, these instances of prosecutorial misconduct, in

combination, undermined the fundamental fairness of the trial and

require us, in the interest of justice, to wipe the slate clean.

          Having determined that these instances of prosecutorial

misconduct require that the conviction be vacated, we do not

address other issues that arose in the trial but are not likely to

arise in any new trial of this case.

        III. PROSECUTORIAL ARGUMENT ABOUT PROBABLE CAUSE

          The prosecutorial argument about probable cause (quoted

in Part II.A above) exceeded proper bounds. We address the matter

only briefly, because this issue is unlikely to arise again in a

new trial.

          The prosecutorial argument on this subject is defended on

appeal on the ground that it was a fair response to defendant's

closing argument. The defense summation included an argument to

the jury that no incriminating evidence would have been found had

the government searched defendant's living quarters because no such

incriminating evidence existed. We assume, dubitante, that this

was a permissible defense argument. In any event, the prosecutor

did not object and the district judge did not intervene.

          The response by the prosecutor to the defendant's

argument was, nevertheless, not permissible. First, a prosecutor

cannot escape the law's prohibitions against arguments on matters

not properly to be considered by the jury in a criminal case by

                              -21-


deliberately withholding an objection to an objectionable defense

argument and arguing that the defense opened the door. Second,

even if we assume that the defense argument was permissible and did

"open the door" to a rebuttal argument by the prosecutor, the scope

of a permitted response is not unlimited. Here, the prosecutor's

response made assertions of fact about conduct and events that were

not supported by any evidence in the record and added assertions of

law that were not entirely accurate.  See Part II.A above. Thus,

the response was out of bounds.

          We say no more on this subject because it is unlikely

that this issue will arise in a new trial.

                     IV. JURY INSTRUCTIONS

          The appellant raises additional issues regarding the

court's instructions to the jury. We address only two such issues

because others are unlikely to arise again in a new trial. First,

the district court instructed and reinstructed on the jury's

drawing an inference of intent to distribute, founded on evidence

about quantity of steroids amassed by the defendant. Second, the

district court declined to give the requested instructions as

framed by the defendant regarding an inference or presumption of

the legality of possession, based on evidence of procurement from

a licensed provider. For the reasons stated below, we conclude

that appellant's objections lack merit.

          "The challenged instruction is reviewed for abuse of

discretion to determine whether the charge, taken as a whole fairly

                              -22-


and adequately submit[s] the issues in the case to the jury."

United  
                 States v.   Rose, 104 F.3d 1408, 1412 (1st Cir. 1997)

(citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).  See also

United States v. Mitchell, 85 F.3d 800 (1st Cir. 1996).

          We conclude that the district court's instructions and

reinstructions on permissible inferences were not an abuse of

discretion. On the contrary, the instructions and subsequent

reinstructions on an inference from the quantity of drugs possessed

were consistent with a large body of precedent. 
                                                         See 
                                                             Rose, 104 F.3d

at 1413. Specifically with regard to drug possession and intent to

distribute, this Circuit has recognized that possession of large

quantities of drugs permits the inference that the drugs are for

distribution and not personal use.   See,  e.g., United 
                                                                  States v

Echeverri, 982 F.2d 675, 678 (1st Cir. 1993);   United 
                                                                 States v.

Ocampo-Guarin, 968 F.2d 1406, 1410 (1st Cir. 1992); United States

v. Batista-Polanco, 927 F.2d 14, 18-19 (1st Cir. 1991).

          In this case, the trial judge gave somewhat more emphasis

than is usually given to one factor by saying that "it may be

unlikely that an individual in possession of a large quantity of

anabolic steroids" intends them "for his own use." The relatively

isolated placement of this remark in a reinstruction given in

response to a jury request added to the emphasis. The charge to

the jury must nevertheless be taken as a whole. See 
                                                              United States

v. Boylan, 898 F.2d 230, 244 (1st Cir. 1990);   United 
                                                                 States v.

Griffin, 818 F.2d 97, 100 (1st Cir. 1987); see also United States

v. 
            Acosta, 763 F.2d 671, 677 (5th Cir. 1985) (finding it proper for

                              -23-


a trial judge to limit reinstruction to the specific request made

by a jury). Read in its entirety, the court's instructions explain

the applicable law appropriately and without misleading the jury.

See United 
                     States v. Alzanki, 54 F.3d 994, 1001 (1st Cir. 1995).

The fact that one part of the instructions was repeated in response

to the jury's written request does not change our assessment that

the instructions taken as a whole were a fair and correct statement

of law. See Rose, 104 F.3d at 1416.    See 
                                                     also United 
                                                                 States v.

Ladd, 885 F.2d 954, 959 (1st Cir. 1989); Acosta, 763 F.2d at 677-

78.

          As to the issue regarding the denial of the defendant's

request for instructions based upon 21 U.S.C. S 844(a), we perceive

no error on the part of the court. In relevant part, the statute

provides that "it shall be unlawful for any person knowingly or

intentionally to possess a controlled substance unless such

substance was obtained directly, or pursuant to a valid

prescription..." 21 U.S.C. S 844(a). The defendant's request was

flawed in that it would have placed in the mouth of the trial judge

an implied if not express statement that it was an undisputed fact

that Roberts obtained the steroids pursuant to a valid

prescription. It is true, without dispute in this record, that

Roberts obtained the prescription from a veterinarian licensed to

dispense steroids, and that the prescription was strictly for

animal use, not for human consumption. But no evidence in the

record even tends to prove that Roberts meant the steroids for

animal use. A defense request that the court give an instruction

                              -24-


containing an implicit assumption of the truth of his contention,

unsupported by evidence, was thus a flawed request. The trial

judge did not err in declining to give this requested instruction.

See United States v. Silvestri, 790 F.2d 186, 193 (1st Cir. 1986)

(finding that a court need not instruct a jury on a defense theory

if there is no supporting evidence in the record).

                 V. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

          The beyond-reasonable-doubt burden applies to "every

element" of each offense charged but neither to all the subsidiary

inferences nor to "every hypothesis consistent with the defendant's

innocence."  United States v. Spinney, 65 F.3d 231, 234 (1st Cir.

1995).

          Although the strength of the evidence proffered against

Roberts was less than overwhelming, after considering the record in

full, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient for a reasonable

jury to find beyond reasonable doubt every element of the offenses

charged in the two counts of the indictment. We conclude that the

defendant's request for a judgment of acquittal must be denied.

                           CONCLUSION

          For the reasons explained in this opinion, it is ORDERED:

          The judgment convicting Daniel Roberts of the charges

stated in the two counts of the indictment is 
                                                      VACATED. The case is

REMANDED for new trial. Costs are awarded to the appellant.

                              -25-